South Park Takes Trump Attacks to Wild New Level With Graphic Trump-Vance Sex Scene
South Park’s Trey Parker and Matt Stone upped the ante on their hits against President Donald Trump, with the latest episode of the Comedy Central series depicting Trump having sex with Vice President JD Vance.
In Sora Not Sorry, which aired Wednesday evening, Trump and Vance are depicted having intercourse in the Lincoln Bedroom.
“But boss, what about Satan?” the cartoon Vance, depicted as a version of Fantasy Island’s Tattoo, asked Trump while the two lay in bed together.
In the latest season, the cartoon Trump is in a toxic relationship with Satan and the two are expecting a baby. The cartoon Vance has been working behind the scenes to have the baby aborted. On Wednesday’s episode, he revealed his betrayal to Trump.
The cartoon Trump ignored the Satan question, and a thong-wearing Vance then told him, “Oh boss, it’s so big.” A running gag this season has been depicting the president with a micropenis.
The two are then shown having intercourse with Parker and Stone getting close-ups of both of their faces, as well as a painting of Abraham Lincoln looking on.
Video of the cartoon intercourse later gets leaked to the press with Fox News anchors and hosts reporting the news. All are shown as rather shaken up by the “disheartening news,” but cartoon Trump calls into Fox & Friends and explains the whole thing was “fake” and he’s doing “great things” at the White House. The Fox anchors then all celebrate after Trump convinces them the video was not real.
“Of course it was fake! How could we have doubted it!” one anchor declares.
Trump and Satan are then shown in bed together with Satan asking if the video is real because it looks “really real.”
“Relax, guy!” cartoon Trump says before heading off to get a “snack,” which turns out to be another run-in with cartoon Vance.
South Park has focused more on political hits this season, even earning pushback from the White House and officials they’ve depicted — including Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, who was shown as a puppy serial killer.
Parker and Stone explained in a recent New York Times interview that the show has become more political because politics has overtaken culture.
“It’s not that we got all political. It’s that politics became pop culture,” Parker said.
Stone added that the pair is attracted to “taboo” comedy subjects.
“Trey and I are attracted to that like flies to honey,” he said. “Oh, that’s where the taboo is? Over there? OK, then we’re over there.”
Watch above via Comedy Central (Warning: graphic content).
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